Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, December 29, 1906, Page 6

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I Set the Pace | aSwiftOne | Watch Others | Follow | Prices Will Reach Their Lowest Limit BEN LEVY'S EDITORIAL Two words will explain it--- wait and watch---there is going to be something doing---get read y---watch papers circulars for further announcements --- and hang on to your money until you hear from Yours truly BEN LEVY WAIT AND WATGH | Store have passed beyond the experimen: ; tal stage, at least as to Norway pine. If white pine also can be used, it; | surely" solves the most vexing andj | indeed the only problem in the settle- | | ment of all this northeastern portion | | of the state.—Duluth News Tribnne. | HAD KNOWLEDGE OF weDicine. Comprehensive Treatise Written by | Egyptian 7,000 Years Ago. { 1 A roll of papyrus acquired by Dr. ; of Every Winter Article inthe Store | | Ebers, in the vicinity of Thebes, | | Egypt, in the winter of 1872, from an — | Arab who made ancient grave Tob | | bing a business, after investigation ; and translation was deposited in the i | library of the University of Leipsic. The script of this papyrus is hieratic; | the date of it is said to be over 7,00C | years ago It is a comprehensive | treatise on medicine. Diseases of the abdomen, the chest, the heart, the eyes, the ears and so on are carefully arranged and described in a manne that would command respect at thi | present day. For instance, of the | heart, the papyrus classifies the trou- | bles as fatty degeneration, dilation, | carditis, angina or spasm, hypertro- | phy (enlargement), thrombosis (plug- | ging) and dropsy. Of medicines over ; seven hundred different substances are enumerated and they are pre- | scribed in pills, in tablets, in capsules, in decoctions, powders, inhalatiors, lotions, ointments, plasters. Sale Opens Jan. 14 Matt McBride ——PRACTICAL— PLUMBING STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING Jobbing promptly attended to. Estimates and plans furnished on all kinds of work in my line —Satisfaction guaranteed. MATT MCBRIDE Grand Rapids : Minnesota News Gatliered During the Weck Mrs. J friends at P. Trebilcock is visiting Ben Levy of the Enterprise store 1s visiting his family in Minneapolis. Commissioner Passard made a busi- ness trp to Duluth Thursday, return- ing this morning. The Bluebell club enjoyed one of their pleasant dancing parties at Vill- age hall last evening. Mrs. George Booth entertained the Monday Whist club on Thursday afternoon this week. ‘The dance anncunced for the even- ing of January 4 by the Arbutus club has been postponed to Friday evening, January 11, E. Johnson and her Miss Rae, returned today sit with friends and relatives Mr, and Mrs. H. E, Graffam and Master Henry returned yesterday from Duluth where they had spent Christ- mas with relatives. D. M. Gunn and Miss Mar- garet Gunn were passengers to yesterday, expecting to re- ternoon. A. M. Boer of Duluth and he ghter, Miss Nellie, who 1s teachin, are spending the holt inends at Winnipeg. Jarvis Partridge is spending the days with his mother in Grand He 1s instructor in science ho Ra s public schools at Wadena. The nine months old baby of James Nelson died yesterday. Funeral services will pe held today at 2 o’clock in the Scandinavian Lutheran church, Mr.and Mrs. J. Floodwood and Mr. and Mrs, W. A. Kiley of Virginia, spent Christmas with the old folks of the Herald-Reivew sehold. It was a complete reunion, Mr. V. M. Byrne, who has been a valued employe on the Grand Rapids Experiment farm during the past three years, left yesterday for the State Uni- course. He isa young man who will do credit to himself and the educa- tioual institution which he is about to enter, Register of Deeds McGowan ar- rived home on this morning’s train from a visit with his mother in Wis— consin. Mrs. McGowan and the baby remained for a couple of days’ visit in Superior. Members of the Itasca County Agricultural society should attend the meeting at Village hall on Monday next, when there will be elected a delegate to attend the annual meeting of the State Fair association. Mr. W, -H. Johnson and Miss Isabelle Berntson, both ot Deer River, were married by Rev. M. Peterson at day. The newly married couple left for their home in Deer River on the night train. Henry Finley of Bigfork was down to the hub this week. He says busi- ness up in the northern nver yalley is, very good this winter. Mr, Finley E. Brandmier of has bought the hotel formerly owned by Lander Larson. J. W. Johnson is manager of the hotel. James E. Clair, Brunswick, a brother of A. B. Clair} nd Mrs, |. F, Metzger, is here on -a two week’s visit. In company with his brother he made a trip to Muinne- |apolis Thursday to look over an up- to-date western city. of Clair, New} Chris Hanson was week from the Bigfork, Chris is one of the successful and _ progressive Itasca county farmers who harvests a good years’ salary every fall as a re- sult of the summer’s work, and has all winter to enjoy the fruits of his labors. in town this E. J. Luther is back from a tnp to Minneapolis where he went to meet one ot his associates in a mining deal in Nevada, Late advices from the Nevada district in which Mr. Luther is interested give him assurances that he owns considerable valuable mining stock. his residence at 5:30 p. m, Christmas| ° }are encased with brick and are filled a supply of watches and jewelry. to have a furnace’ correctly installed as it is to select a good furnace. There are all kinds of furnaces on the market just the same as’ there are all kinds of stoyes. You can get a cheap furnace and have it cheaply installed but you won't save any money for the reason that it will use more fuel and will not prove durable. If you will invest a little more-and get the good ROUND OAK furnace and have it put in after our scientiffe plans which we will furnish free, you can rest assured it will prove a permanent improvement. The ROUND OAK furnace is made just as carefully and good as the ROUND OAK stove. It will burn any kind of fuel; it will hold the fire at any speed desired; it is a powerful heater and economical in the use of fuel; it is making thecheap furnace look like a ‘very expensive proposition where- ever it gets the chance. We invite you to investigate the ROUND OAK furnace. We furn- ish plans and esti- mates promptly. Get our Furnace { / Book “Warmth and ¢ Comfort” 4 how soon do w . I'd rather w “Say, Doe-wab-j ret to a stopping W.J. & H. D. Powers Grand Rapids, Minn. You can get a nice porcelain or gilt clock for your dresser for $1.00 at Nisbett’s. Regular price $2.00 to es ITASCA COUNTY | ABTAACT OFTICE M. E. Church Services. ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE, Junior League Epworth League .......... Prayer Meeting. .. Thursday. Choir Rehears Conveyances Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, KREMER & KING, Proprietors, A cordial invitation is extended to all. ‘GRAND RAPIDS. = % MISN Mr. Nisbett has been engaged in this business fora dozen years or more and his reputation for reliability 1s so bh sere will established that he needs no recommendation to the boys who know him, Mr. Nisbett’s guarantee J P is good. e e Owing to an unusual amount of legal notices In this issue of the Her- ald-Review together with the Christ- mas vacation of the office force this week's Herald-Review is very much short on local news. Under the cir- cumstances we feel that our readers will overlook the poor quality of the local news pages. WANTED—Plain sewing by Mrs. Orra Harry on Leland avenue. PINE STUMPS MADE VALUABLE The News Tribune recently refer- red to the turpentine. plant at Hinckley, which uses pine stumps as its raw material. An effort made to establish a similar plant at Lady- smith, Wis., brings to light some facts concerning the | The Hinckley plant was established three years ago by a| Russian, H. Copilovich, and has prospered. It uses only the Norway pine, but it is believed that white pine is also available and this is to be tested. The process is compar- 10c counters. Well all over again. and we won’t carry over and the interesting industry. TOGO CCOCO COC OOO OOOO ICICI IIEIDICICICION IOORIORION. boilers standing verticilly, These | atively simple. The | stumps are | swead into blocks. Large ~ iron | Watches, Balls, Horns, rattles. Banks, Pur retorts are constructed, like flueless | re, Kerch Tow dies’ and Men's s, Pickle Dishes, Water 8, Etc. with the blocks, sealed airtight, and fires are made in furnaces at the bottom of structures. Three days are required to run off a retort, the | liquid passing out of pipes leading | to condensers. When the process of | extraction is completed the residue I aggre ON parc ta ea eae energies Shirts, Books, Games, Dolla, Stoves, Tea Sets, is charcoal. The raw material is | BODES SORA OYE meee penny. ene ENOL: Checker Boards, Mechanical ‘Toys, Dog refined in a distillery similar to! Banks, Glassware, Yarn Bath Slippers and a Harness, Baskets, Doll Houses, Doll Beds, those used in ordinary distillation. big bunch of articles. Pretty Dishes. From one cord of the blocks there Values from 10¢ to 75¢ 25¢ to $1.50 Sellers is secured sixteen gallons of turpen- j tine, twenty gallons of tar, ten gal- | lons of tar oil, and thirty bushels of | me charcoal, worth as jobbers’ prices | 3 $15.10. Besides this, acetates of | ia soda, lime and lead or wood alcohol | form by-products. It is estimated | be x COM sume ten cords of stumps a day, for | clear in a year 300 to 400 acres of | Will Nisbett, the jewler, 1s about to ty where he will entexghe School of Agriculture to take a three years start out on his annual pilgrimage to the lumber camps of this section with "$12,000 for their labor, with as much thata plant of six retorts will con- which $4a cord is paid. This would 8 - land, making it ready for tillage and | bring to the owners of the land ‘over POCHEEEDC PREETI 5¢ Clearance 10¢ Tables 25¢ Sale You have heard folks tell what they have seen on 5c and We have no room to carry over ho gether on 8 tables staple goods running from 5c to $1.50 and “Earliest birds get the best buqs’’ We can but list a few articles here. values to appreciate them. Chese goods are worth from 5¢ to 25¢ Towels, Neckwear (50c’ kind), Mufflers, Boy's J. P. O’DONNELL $ioconccccoTeeoecosOCeNceceOCeCsOcCeRt O’DONNELL if you were surprised we will anepine oe ay goods them over. To this line we have placed to- You must see the 5c Gloves, , Curtain ns, Stocking Men’s Dishes, Undervw ? Tams, Sweate HF FARLY PRR REESE EOE SHS MOSHE BH SPM HESS IE EEE BE SEE mane

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